5 frames from an obsolete camera, the Olympus i-10

By John Andrews

A log time ago in a far off century, 1996 to be precise, a collective consortium got together led by Kodak, Canon, Minolta, and Nikon to launch a new film format, this format became known as APS (Advanced Photo system).

Comparison with a standard 35mm cassette

Their idea was to make picture taking a much easier process, using self loading cartridges, offering three different film ratios, of 3.2, 16.9 and a P or a panoramic ratio. At the time it seemed a good idea for people wanting a start in film photography, where the process gave the photographer, a simple small and pocket able camera, and several different models soon became available. Unfortunately, very much like the 110 format, it had a very short life, and was discontinued in 2011.

In the image below one can see the size in comparison to my Nikon F3 ,and the APS film in comparison to a standard 35mm cassette.

The 1-10 in comparison with my Nikon F3

Anyway, back to the future now, and to a trip to Oswestry, where I often visit. The discovery of a small camera shop called Abbey photographic attracted me to go inside. Gareth who runs the shop has a large collection of second hand classic cameras of his own and also buys and sells film cameras too. He also often has outdated film, and was kind enough at no charge, to deposit me with a roll of Fuji APS film. it was then I remembered back home in my film camera collection, I had an APS camera, one Olympus i-10.

 

Where the film slides in the base JPEG_PICTURE

The i-10 has a fixed focus lens of 24mm, composed of three elements in three groups, and an electronic shutter ranging from 1/50 of a second to 1/200, and also dates the film too. Back home I loaded the camera and took it out for a walk to see what it was capable of.

Once the film was finished I dropped it off to Max Speilman, for develop only and a CD, which I normally do with colour film. Then it goes gets viewed and adjusted in my ancient Windows 7 laptop using Photoshop 6, suprisingly it didn’t need a lot doing to it, just a slight adjustment on the curves.

The images were a lot better than I expected, but did I like it and would I use again? Small and very pocketable, with an extremely small viewing window, I use glasses all the time, so I think not.

I

I still have another APS roll still to use, but it can go back on the shelf again with the camera. I have much better cameras and projects in the pipeline, but for a couple of quid from a charity shop, I can’t really complain.

 

Share this post:

About The Author

By John Andrews
A retired professional photographer and qualified lecturer, but over the past 10 years been running my own business, as the Vintage bike stable, restoring classic road and MTB cycles. The business has now ceased, due to rising costs, so now very much back into photography, mainly film, but digital too. Also an avid collector of film cameras, with far to many.
Read More Articles From John Andrews

Find more similar content on 35mmc

Use the tags below to search for more posts on related topics:

Donate to the upkeep, or contribute to 35mmc for an ad-free experience.

There are two ways to contribute to 35mmc and experience it without the adverts:

Paid Subscription – £2.99 per month and you’ll never see an advert again! (Free 3-day trial).
If you think £2.99 a month is too little, then please subscribe and I can manually edit the subscription value for you – thank you very much in advance if this is what you would like to do!

Subscribe here.

Content contributor – become a part of the world’s biggest film and alternative photography community blog. All our Contributors have an ad-free experience for life.

Sign up here.

Make a donation – If you would simply like to support Hamish Gill and 35mmc financially, you can also do so via ko-fi

Donate to 35mmc here.

Comments

No comments found

Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *